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words and particular groups within the same types. The pattern of morpheme
arrangement underlies the classification of words into different types and enables one
to understand how new words appear in the language. These relations within the
word and the interrelations between different types and classes of words are known as
derivational or word- formation relations.
The analysis of derivative or derivational relations
aims at establishing a
correlation between different types and the structural patterns words are built on. The
basic unit at the derivational level is the stem.
The stem is defined as that part of the word which remains unchanged
throughout its paradigm, thus the stem which appears in the paradigm (to)
ask, asks,
asked, asking
is
ask-;
the stem of the word
singer, singer's, singers, singers'
is
singer-
.
It is the stem of the word that takes the inflections which change the word
grammatically as one or another part of speech.
The structure of stems should be described in terms of IC's analysis, which at
this level aims at establishing the patterns of typical derivational relations within the
stem and the derivative correlation between stems of different types. There are three
types of stems: simple, derived and compound. Simple
stems are semantically non-
motivated and do not constitute a pattern on analogy with which new stems may be
modeled. Simple stems are generally monomorphic and phonetically identical with
the root morpheme. The derivational structure of stems does not always coincide with
the result of morphemic analysis. Comparison proves that not all morphemes relevant
at the morphemic level are relevant at the derivational level of analysis. It follows
that bound morphemes and all types of pseudo- morphemes
are irrelevant to the
derivational'structure of stems as they do not meet requirements of double opposition
and derivational interrelations. So the stem of such words as
retain, receive, horrible,
pocket, motion,
etc. should be regarded as simple, non- motivated stems.
Derived stems are built on stems of various structures though which they are
motivated, i.e. derived stems are understood on the basis of the derivative relations
between their immediate constituents and the correlated stems. The derived stems are
mostly polymorphic in which case the segmentation results only in one immediate
constituents that
is itself a stem, the other immediate constituent being necessarily a
derivational affix. Derived stems are not necessarily polymorphic.
Compound stems are made up of two stems, both of which are themselves
stems,
for example, match-box, driving-suit, pen-holder,
etc. It is built by joining of
two stems, one of which is simple, the other derived.
Bound lexical morphemes are affixes: prefixes (dis-), suffixes (-ish) and also
blocked (unique)
root morphemes
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